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Mercedes-Benz C291

Racing car


Summary

Racing car

FieldValue
Car_nameMercedes-Benz C291
Image[[File:1991 Mercedes-Benz C291 Automuseum Dr. Carl Benz, 2014 (02).JPG250px]]
CaptionA C291 at the Automuseum Dr. Carl Benz, 2014
CategoryGroup C Prototype
ConstructorSauber Motorsport
PredecessorMercedes-Benz C11
SuccessorMercedes-Benz C292
TeamDEU Team Sauber Mercedes
Drivers{{ubl
Technical ref
Length
Width
Height
Wheelbase
Track
Engine nameMercedes-Benz M291
Capacity
Weight
Debut1991 430 km of Monza
First_win1991 430 km of Autopolis
Last_win1991 430 km of Autopolis
Last_event1991 430 km of Autopolis
Entries8
Races8
Wins1
Podiums3

|FRA Jean-Louis Schlesser |GER Jochen Mass |AUT Karl Wendlinger |GER Michael Schumacher |GER Fritz Kreutzpointner | Turbo/NA = The Mercedes-Benz C291 was a sports-prototype racing car introduced for the 1991 World Sportscar Championship season. It was Mercedes-Benz’ final car in the Group C category.

Introduction

The 1991 season marked the introduction of the FIA’s new, and controversial, 3.5 litre formula which replaced the highly successful Group C category that had been used in the World Sportscar Championship since 1982, though due to a small number of entries for the 3.5 litre formula heavily penalised Group C cars (which were subject to weight penalties and started behind the new-style C1 entries on the grid) were allowed to participate in the season's C2 category.

To meet the new regulations Mercedes-Benz came up with an all-new car; the C291 which was designed by its racing partner Sauber.

One survived and is on display in the Carl Benz Museum in Ladenburg, Germany. Another one is located in the Michael Schumacher Collection in Cologne, and this is the Autopolis-winning chassis.

Engine

The primary feature of the new regulations was the use of a 3.5 litre naturally aspirated engine. This made it impossible for Mercedes-Benz to use the engines from its previous Group C cars. Also, to produce similar power to the Group C cars a 3.5 litre naturally aspirated engine had to be very high-revving and be constructed from different materials in order to rev highly.

Unlike Jaguar's XJR-14 who had the readily available and proven Ford HB V8 engine from the Benetton B190B Formula One car (the engine regulations for the new 3.5 litre formula were identical to Formula One), Mercedes-Benz had to design an all-new purpose-built racing engine and its M-291 3.5L flat-12 unit was the result. The engine produced about 550-600 bhp compared to about 730 bhp produced by the 5.0 litre twin turbo V8 found in the C291's predecessor, the Mercedes-Benz C11.

Design

Unlike the Jaguar XJR-14, the C291 resembled previous sports-prototypes, despite the fact that the redesign of the Le Mans Circuit de la Sarthe in 1990 meant cars with their low drag design, top-end power, straight-line acceleration and top-speed characteristics were no longer required. Unlike the Jaguar (and latterly the Peugeot 905B) the Mercedes still featured a full-width low-drag single-tier rear wing and no front wing. This resulted in the car having a higher top speed than the Jaguar (and only slightly less than old Group C cars).

However, this, allied to the characteristics of the 3.5 litre engine, meant the car would have slower acceleration above 150-170 mph than most Group C cars, therefore not taking advantage of the low-drag design, and conversely the low-drag design meant the car was slower in the corners than the Jaguar and Peugeot's 905B, this time not taking advantage of the lower kerb weight of 750 kg. Overall the C291 was not as fast as a contemporary Formula One car around some circuits used by the Grand Prix fraternity, and was a lot slower at Le Mans' Circuit de la Sarthe in 1991.

Race results

During the development and testing of the new M291 powerplant, it became apparent to Sauber Mercedes that there were problems in the engine design and construction. Thus the team started the 1991 season with a lone C291, while at the same time running an older C11. In the first two races of the season, the C291 failed to finish while the C11 finished 2nd and 3rd. At the third race, the C291 scored a 2nd-place finish, ahead of the C11. For the fourth round, the 1991 24 Hours of Le Mans, the team decided that the C291 would not be capable of completing the race, and thus were forced to enter three C11s.

After Le Mans, Sauber Mercedes decided that the C291 had been developed enough to compete on its own, and it finished the season without running a C11 alongside. However, the C291 failed to finish the next three races of the season. Only in the final race of the year at Autopolis was the C291 not only able to finish, but also able to score its only win. Sauber Mercedes finished the season third in the teams championship.

After much disappointment the C291 was planned to be replaced by the more radical C292 for the 1992 season, but Mercedes-Benz decided to pull out of sportscar racing before the C292 could compete and turned to Formula 1 in 1993, although it did not continue to use the troublesome M291 powerplant.

Complete World Sportscar Championship results

YearEntrantClassDriversNo.12345678PointsWEMCP1991
Team Sauber MercedesGroup CSUZMNZSILLMSNURMAGMEXAUT703rd
FRA Jean-Louis Schlesser11418115
GER Jochen Mass14115
AUT Karl Wendlinger214142DNQ1514121
GER Michael Schumacher14142DNQ1514121
GER Fritz KreutzpointnerDNQ

References

References

  1. Insert formatted reference
  2. (2019-06-17). "Sauber-Mercedes Victory 1989 Le Mans 24 Hours - Profile, Photos".
  3. D, Nick. (22 April 2016). "1991→1991 Sauber Mercedes C291".
  4. (20 September 2016). "La Mercedes C291 de Michael Schumacher reprend la piste - Automoto {{!}} TF1".
  5. "That time Mercedes almost built an 18-cylinder engine".
  6. Petrány, Máté. (2017-05-22). "This Group C Sauber-Mercedes Is the Car That Inspired the Pagani Zonda".
  7. (18 January 2017). "Listen To The Howl Of The Doomed Mercedes Flat-12 Engine".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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